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Science

Bizarre 'Dark Fluid' With Negative Mass Could Dominate the Universe (theconversation.com) 166

One of the most galling mysteries in physics is that of the dark matter and dark energy. Scientists believe that together, these could account for up to 95 percent of the total mass in the universe. Now, a researcher at the University of Oxford says a new theory could explain all that "dark phenomena." From a report: The two mysterious dark substances can only be inferred from gravitational effects. Dark matter may be an invisible material, but it exerts a gravitational force on surrounding matter that we can measure. Dark energy is a repulsive force that makes the universe expand at an accelerating rate. The two have always been treated as separate phenomena. But my new study, published in Astronomy and Astrophysics, suggests they may both be part of the same strange concept -- a single, unified "dark fluid" of negative masses.

Negative masses are a hypothetical form of matter that would have a type of negative gravity -- repelling all other material around them. Unlike familiar positive mass matter, if a negative mass was pushed, it would accelerate towards you rather than away from you. Negative masses are not a new idea in cosmology. Just like normal matter, negative mass particles would become more spread out as the universe expands -- meaning that their repulsive force would become weaker over time. However, studies have shown that the force driving the accelerating expansion of the universe is relentlessly constant. This inconsistency has previously led researchers to abandon this idea. If a dark fluid exists, it should not thin out over time.

In the new study, I propose a modification to Einstein's theory of general relativity to allow negative masses to not only exist, but to be created continuously. "Matter creation" was already included in an early alternative theory to the Big Bang, known as the Steady State model. The main assumption was that (positive mass) matter was continuously created to replenish material as the universe expands. We now know from observational evidence that this is incorrect. However, that doesn't mean that negative mass matter can't be continuously created. I show that this assumed dark fluid is never spread too thinly. Instead it behaves exactly like dark energy.

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Bizarre 'Dark Fluid' With Negative Mass Could Dominate the Universe

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  • by AbRASiON ( 589899 ) * on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @03:40PM (#57754472) Journal

    I had the lamb vindaloo for lunch.

  • by prhodes ( 625766 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @03:45PM (#57754508)
    I want my negasphere!
  • Grasping at Straws (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @03:47PM (#57754526)

    Is it just me or has the physics community been grasping at straws lately?

    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:06PM (#57754630) Journal
      You mean grasping at Strings
    • We're not allowed to use straws anymore..

      The matter isn't "dark", it just vibrates at a very low frequency.

      He's very tall, you know

      I know, I know

      He looks even taller because he has high blood pressure

    • by TeknoHog ( 164938 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:09PM (#57754658) Homepage Journal
      Yes. I majored in physics, and I find this theory utterly repulsive.
      • by tsa ( 15680 )

        I wonder which facts support it. I guess none.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by bobbied ( 2522392 )

        Yes. I majored in physics, and I find this theory utterly repulsive.

        Yes, I see what you did there... Very good... I just wish I had mod points today.

        +1 Funny

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Yes. I majored in physics, and I find this theory utterly repulsive.

        There is no need to be so negative about this matter.

      • Yes. I majored in physics, and I find this theory utterly repulsive.

        That's a charged statement!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Physics is always "grasping at straws". Anti-matter (the positron specifically) was first predicted because of an unavoidable negative-energy solution that popped out in some math that Dirac was doing with regard to electrons. So, negative mass being predicted and then searched for is not at all unprecedented.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positron#Theory

    • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:24PM (#57754758) Journal

      Is it just me or has the physics community been grasping at straws lately?

      Certainly TFS is, or string theory for that matter. Dark matter and dark energy are a bit different: they're observed phenomena that we can't explain. Gotta call them something. It's only been a few years since is was confirmed that dark matter was even "mater" (not modified gravity or somesuch), and it's still just guesswork that dark energy is "energy" in te way we currently understand it.

      Minor quibble, but I cringe when stories talk about energy having mass. While you can express that mathematically and be fine, it doesn't match the meaning of those words in common usage. It's better to say that mass is a particular kind of energy than to say that e.g. a magnetic field "has mass" or that a spring has more mass when compressed. Being cryptic for the sake of being cryptic doesn't belong in science.

      • by loonycyborg ( 1262242 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:41PM (#57754900)
        Entire gravity is one big phenomenon that we can't explain. Negative mass fluid sounds like the same as Luminiferous Aether, something we made up on analogy with our lower level phenomena. Occam's razor suggests that it's better to expect an explanation for metric expansion of space in future improved versions of existing theories. Perhaps quantization of gravity will help?
        • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:58PM (#57755018) Journal

          Occam's razor suggests that it's better to expect an explanation for metric expansion of space in future improved versions of existing theories.

          "inflation" theories have been all the rage for a decade (strange overlap between cosmology and QM). A big percentage of dark energy theories are just new versions of inflation theories. But "inflation" is not much better understood than dark energy, so I'm not sure that helps much. The cosmology of the first tiny fraction of a second of the universe is going to be stuck without evidence until someone invents a neutrino observatory.

          Heck, it's not even certain dark energy is a change in the metric (though it's pretty likely), all we know for sure is that distances are increasing, at a possibly accelerating rate. Dark energy as a sort of negative pressure (tension) in space is I think the leading idea, but that's not really explaining anything interesting, just restating the problem in terms of general relativity.

          • by balbeir ( 557475 )
            We just have to raise the interest rate of the universe then
          • The cosmology of the first tiny fraction of a second of the universe is going to be stuck without evidence until someone invents a neutrino observatory.

            Like this one? [wikipedia.org]

            • by lgw ( 121541 )

              That's a detector, not an observatory, despite the jumped-up name. To measure the CNBR, we'd need to be able to measure a large sample of neutrinos coming from an arbitrary direction with a controlled aperture. What we can measure now is the light cone of Cherenkov radiation from the decay products of neutrinos interacting with stuff, and the knowledge that neutrinos passing through the Earth behave slightly differently than those that don't.

              It's the difference between a telescope, and measuring the curr

              • Please feel free to email your design for a neutrino telescope to Santa Claus at the North Pole.

                • by lgw ( 121541 )

                  That was my original point, right? We're stuck until we get a neutrino observatory (and that may be a while).

      • I cringe when stories talk about energy having mass.

        Energy may not have mass but it does have gravity. [wikipedia.org]

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          Yes, that was exactly the point. Energy is the thing with gravity, inertia, and so on. Mass is a specific kind of energy (though even that gets a bit fuzzy, as most of the mass of familiar matter is the binding energy of the strong force in hadrons).

    • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:26PM (#57754776) Homepage
      At the edge of knowledge, you will always find strange concepts. That is nothing new. It never was different. Wave-particle-dualism, morphing spacetime, magnetism, electricity and light being the same thing -- all of those have been fringe ideas at first (or as Max Planck once put it: acts of desperation). Only in hindsight, when they are long established in the scientific community, we consider them matters of course.
      • Wave-particle-dualism, morphing spacetime, magnetism, electricity and light being the same thing -- all of those have been fringe ideas at first (or as Max Planck once put it: acts of desperation).

        And wave-particle dualism still sounds hinky. There has to be a better explanation for the double slit experiment. Wave-particle dualism sounds like a bad analogy for whatever is really happening.

        And so we have this argument [wikipedia.org].

        • by Sique ( 173459 )
          I'm with Richard Feynman in this case. It doesn't matter if it is absurd. It doesn't matter if it doesn't fit any nice philosophical concept. It only matters that it allows to calculate events for 10 or 20 digits or better, and the results of the calculation fits the experiment.

          Someone once told me, for him the wave-particle dualism looks to him as if macroscopicly, there are mansions, and there are workshops. And now someone talks about the mansion-workshop-dualism of bricks, and how only the constructio

          • AFAIK wave particle dualism doesn't allow us to calculate much of anything though. It's just a proposed explanation for an observed phenomenon. I'm not familiar with the quote but I think Feinmen must have been talking about something else there. Certainly there are things in physics which seem counterintuitive or nonsensical, but do allow us to make some incredibly precise calculations and predictions.

            On that note, so did Newtonian physics. Newtons models are still very useful even today. They just tu

    • The obvious gap here is how the "dark fluid" is continuously created. Even if the theory fits all cosmological observations, that would still need to be explained.

      The only thing I can think of is that it would accumulate like the scum on a sea quantum foam.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      Eh, I think there is just more public interest lately combined with friendly search tools for bloggers and journalists to mine with. Physics journals are filled with oddball 'here is something to consider' ideas that people want to bounce around and see what others think.
    • That's what science is. You grasp at straws to explain the unexplained, until you find the right straw.

  • Nope (Score:3, Insightful)

    by krray ( 605395 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @03:56PM (#57754580)

    Just NOPE. Dark fluid ... being magically replenished ... wrong answer to a rather complex question.

    They need to explore / understand the fabric of space *itself*. It is stretchable. It can contract. It is also, itself, simply coming apart. If you try to measure this "coming apart" the problem (that I have) is that the measuring instrument itself is coming apart (expanding).

    One day the cohesion of space itself will come to a breaking point (the end).

    • Why is dark fluid being "magically" replenished any less plausible than dark energy being magically replenished?

      And what evidence do you have that space itself is coming apart, much less the things within it? I've never heard of any model that postulates such a thing.

    • If the equations describe observable reality, use them.
    • You can't really claim right or wrong before you put an idea to the test. But I do claim that this shameless self plug is not newsworthy until the author does so and gets some sort of results. Crackpot physics hypotheses are dime a dozen, some of them even mathematically and logically appealing, doesn't mean they in any useful way describe reality. Worth nothing until you test them.
    • How TF do you know? Scientists only understand 4.6% of the universe.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Am I alone in Iâ(TM)m getting tired of looking at comments because I donâ(TM)t want to sift through pages of creamer/apk/nazi/racist posts.

    It wouldnâ(TM)t be so bad if these were original. Today it really looks like a few bits running and spamming every post.

    I miss hot grits, Natalie Portman, Beowulf clusters of thingiemabobs and even the goatse man himself. Well, I donâ(TM)t miss him that much.

    How did we go from meme to vile?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      These aren't even trolls so much as sad autists. Spewing the same copy and pasted garbage in every post. The janitors who run the place can't figure out a simple filter for them. Or perhaps more likely they don't read the comments or even care.

    • We don't even have APK any more thanks to insensitive clods

    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:33PM (#57754826)

      Anonymous troll posts have existed on Slashdot for as long as I've been reading, but the sheer volume of them started climbing dramatically a few years ago.

      Back in the day, I used to read with my threshold at 0 because you would see a fair number of thoughtful comments which were anonymously posted for whatever reason - I was willing to tolerate the crap posts in order to see the good ones. But the sheer number of garbage posts we see nowadays drove me to change my mind - nowadays my "one line comment threshold is set to 1. I know I'm missing some things which probably deserve consideration, but I am unwilling to slog through the cesspool.

  • Gaming the system (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Step 1: Write a peer reviewed article challenging accepted cosmology. Leave open the option that it may be nonsense, so no one can say you're a total crackpot and can pass peer review.
    Bonus step: resuscitate a long dead competitive cosmology model.
    Step 2: Write an opinion piece to generate publicity and buzz for your crazy theoryle (helpful if on Slashdot).
    Step 3: Sit back and watch the refutations publish over and over, thus

  • The answer is simple (Score:3, Interesting)

    by plague911 ( 1292006 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:24PM (#57754754)

    While all the material we see in our universe is due to one big bang, my theory is that the larger universe of truly far away objects is the result of a collection of as many big bangs as there are stars. These big bangs are far enough away that they are unobservable (with current tech) and distributed in such a way that our observable material is pulled apart by them.

    This has the benefit of explaining why our universe is accelerating outwards, and gets away with the fools assumption that the big bang is the one thing in the universe that is unique (hit anything that happens can happen over and over again. Additionally we have no need for some fancy jumping though hoops to explain why we cant see some dark matter that would have to comprise the vast majority of our IMMIDATE surroundings (on a astrophysics scale)

    There it is, give me my Nobel prize. That darn Hawking stole my other one for his obvious theory that black holes decay (nothing lives forever)

    • Quoting one [helsinki.fi] of our most famous physicists:

      I am interested in the backreaction conjecture, according to which structure formation would lead to the observed larger expansion rate and longer distances without the need for dark energy or modified gravity.

      Not quite your multi-big-bang theory but similar elements wrt dark matter/energy. And something that's being studied by professional physicists around the world.

      I'm not familiar with the multi-big-bang theories (I've only seen some headlines) but I have some understanding of the classical idea. Basically, we're inside the ongoing big bang, and it looks like a black hole to the outside. There are probably a lot more out there (see this book [wikipedia.org] for one fun idea) but t

    • All you've done is describe the multiverse, which has been theorised for as long as the big bang (if not longer)
      • The multiverse as I understand it (hey I am not an astrophysicist) is based off of extra dimensions. My half cocked theory is that these extra big-bangs are within but not limited to our current set of dimensions

        Picture a set of atoms within a big old bowling ball, the gravitational pull on atoms near the middle would be similar to this hypothesized gravitation pull, pulling apart our universe.

        Given this theory we could test it by seeing if we can observe differences in the Doppler shift depending on

  • by petes_PoV ( 912422 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:31PM (#57754810)

    However, that doesn't mean that negative mass matter can't be continuously created

    and that's were I got lost. I fail to see how a theory can be dependent on something so fundamental, yet fail to account for it.

    There is also the question of how a negative mass fluid would react with other n/mass fluid particles around it. If positive masses attract each other, and a positive-negative mass interaction results in repulsion, how would two negative-mass particles interact with each other?

    • by painandgreed ( 692585 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @05:07PM (#57755104)

      There is also the question of how a negative mass fluid would react with other n/mass fluid particles around it. If positive masses attract each other, and a positive-negative mass interaction results in repulsion, how would two negative-mass particles interact with each other?

      If you did the math or read the original paper, you'd know that positive masses attract, positive-negative masses accelerate in the same direction, and negative masses repulse.

  • by little1973 ( 467075 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @04:35PM (#57754842)

    because math allows it. But not everything is real what math allows. Just look at the epic failure of SUSY or read "Lost in Math: How Beauty Leads Physics Astray" from theoretical physicist Sabine Hossenfelder.

    "However, studies have shown that the force driving the accelerating expansion of the universe is relentlessly constant."

    And there are several studies which claim that the accelerating expansion of the Universe is an illusion. I think it would be simpler(?) to explain the galactic rotation problem and/or the Bullet Cluster without dark matter with a model. And if that model also says something about the expansion of the Universe which matches the observations that would be an extra. But no model should be built upon solely on the accelerating expansion of the Universe.

    "It therefore appears that a simple minus sign may solve one of the longest standing problems in physics."

    I have read a study which claimed that the bending of light around a galaxy was consistent with the velocity of the stars around the galaxy. That means space-time is really curved with the right amount since there cannot be any repulsive force which bends light.

    A precise extragalactic test of General Relativity
    http://science.sciencemag.org/... [sciencemag.org]

    • by painandgreed ( 692585 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @05:17PM (#57755176)

      because math allows it. But not everything is real what math allows. Just look at the epic failure of SUSY or read "Lost in Math: How Beauty Leads Physics Astray" from theoretical physicist Sabine Hossenfelder.

      True, but you can also look at anti-matter which was shown to exist mathematically but dismissed, only to be found later. I've skimmed over the original paper and it seems pretty good. The author admits that it is just a "toy model" based on the assumption that negative matter exists, but that several known constants can be derived from that model and several observations explained. They go on to list more than a half dozen experimental tests for the same model. Even if just a gedanken experiment that will later prove to be false, it seems they have done better than any of the MOND people with their theories or any of the string theorist people for that matter.

    • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @05:21PM (#57755206)

      Hossenfelder's book is good, Lee Smolin's are better. After reading his first, I found hers to be repeating the same argument except less professionally. And she didn't even have the courage to site him seeing as his arguments predate hers by years, although at the end she does mention Lee couldn't talk her out of writing the book. My guess is he felt it would be bad for her career seeing as she doesn't have nearly the physics chops he has.

    • Yes.

      A similar silly conclusion based on math is the concept of a "4th dimension" (or more). Math allows this. But in the physical universe, there IS NO "one" dimension, or "two" dimensions. These do not exist in physical form, they are only abstract concepts. Nor can there be "four" dimensions, for the same reason. Any number of dimensions in the physical realm, other than three, is purely abstract.

    • "Just look at the epic failure of SUSY or read "Lost in Math: How Beauty Leads Physics Astray" " Or just look at the Higgs Boson, or Special And General relativity who's predictions came to fruition... You're cherry picking.
  • I can't wait to get a hold of some of this stuff. Just think of all of the applications. I'm going to compress it, remove the wheels from my kids skateboard and attach it to the bottom to make the first real hover-board. It should make jet packs a reality too. We shouldn't need as much thrust since it will only be needed for directional control. And just think of the applications for cars. using it to repel some of the mass away from the road will make the car more fuel efficient. And if traction is lost,
    • by crow ( 16139 )

      I was thinking along these lines, but then you have the problem with negative acceleration. You could use this to balance out regular mass to make essentially weightless objects, but it would take massive energy to move them, as the applied force would have to fight the movement of the negative matter.

      Yes, I'm sure there would be a ton of applications, but this is some very weird counter-intuitive stuff.

    • I can't wait to get a hold of some of this stuff.

      How? You reach out for it and it moves away from you. How big would your container / trap need to be?

  • There is a Mexican mathematician by the name of Miguel Alcubierre who came out with description of a theoretical method of propelling a solid object in space at extremely high speeds.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    His theory pencils out as internally consistent, but when you start to match it up the the observable universe, you get into things that we didn't think actually existed - like a requirement for a material with negative mass.

    Fellow Slashdotters, I need a few hundred liters of this stuff for my DIY Alcubierre drive. Anybody got any advice on how I can collect a material that starts to run away faster and faster as I get closer and closer to it?

    TIA!

  • There needs to be a lot more supporting stuff than a speculative idea. Show me an hour long lecture on YouTube outlining the supporting evidence.

  • I think maybe astrophysicists have been watching too many Marvel movies because what they're talking about is basically gravitonium [fandom.com].
  • 0peeium in it (but spelled correctly) immediately deleted? As in, this is an 0peeium dream?

  • Got some. Big puddle under my truck.

  • Give this press release a crackpot score. [ucr.edu] E.g.: 5 points for each mention of "Einstien", "Hawkins" or "Feynmann". So 20 points right there.

    • by Memnos ( 937795 )

      Sure, he's a crackpot. A crackpot with a PhD from Cambridge (the Cavendish Laboratory) who is currently doing research at Oxford, and is on the science team for the construction of the largest radio telescope in the world, who's been published dozens of times in tier-1 peer-reviewed astrophysics journals. So, I guess I'll read what the crackpot has to say.

  • You dont mass if you got math. :)
  • I'm coming for you.

  • by manu0601 ( 2221348 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @07:50PM (#57756014)
    There is this retired cosmologist called Jean-Pierre Petit, who has been pushing such a model for years, with a few papers published in peer reviewed journals. His videos [youtube.com] are very interesting for an introduction to cosmology. Some were translated in english.
  • Unlike familiar positive mass matter, if a negative mass was pushed, it would accelerate towards you rather than away from you.

    I claim a patent on using this as the sleeve for sexbot robovaginas!

  • I could swear he's talking about Stout.

    Negative masses are a hypothetical form of matter that would have a type of negative gravity -- repelling all other material ...

    Like my date and her Coors.

    Unlike familiar positive mass matter, if a negative mass was pushed, it would accelerate towards you rather than away from you.

    Thank god for that.

    ... If a dark fluid exists, it should not thin out over time.

    Again, thank the gods.

    In the new study, I propose a modification to Einstein's theory of general relativit

  • by Sqreater ( 895148 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @10:54PM (#57756874)
    It is more likely something simple, like matter and space being the same thing with one being able to convert into the other. Thus, with matter turning into its space equivalent, the farther out you look the more volume of included matter turning into space you have and so an acceleration away from the viewer. I have an intuitive feeling that space and matter equivalence explains a lot in Relativity and QM. 50 years?
    • P.S. When fission and fusion reactions cause a loss of mass, what happens to the gravity associated with that lost mass? Does it disappear? Or is it left behind without an associated mass? Doses it become a "cloud of gravity" associated with a galaxy's stars? This is not so weird a thought though. A black hole is a singularity of mass, meaning I think, that essentially the mass has disappeared, leaving the gravity associated with that mass behind.
  • theories are made to be broken.
  • Stuff between galaxies that is a) accelerating the expansion of the universe and b) through its negative gravity, compressing galaxies so it looks like they have extra mass?

    Dark matter is considered to be "invisible" mass that makes galaxies behave the way they do by its gravitational effects. But the dark fluid stuff could be sitting between galaxies, and "push"/compress them via negative gravitation?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • How many times does this have to be repeated?

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